Title: Noir StyleNoir Vision
1Noir Style/Noir Vision
2Quiz 2
- Several characters in Graham Greene's work,
including Raven, are described as "angelic
killers." Briefly, what is meant by this term?
- Film noir written by G. Greene, set in Vienna
starring Orson Welles as an "angelic killer."
- Schrader calls this 1955 film, with its Mike
Hammer detective character, "the masterpiece of
film noir," even though it was a "straggler."
- Schrader sees 3 historical phases in film noir.
Which of these does he consider "the cream of the
film noir period"?
- Aside from lighting-related elements, name one
stylistic element prominently discussed by Place
Peterson in "Some Visual Motifs of Film Noir."
3This Gun For Hire (1942) Directed Frank Tuttle
- Ladd and Lake will go on to co-star in noirs The
Glass Key (1942), from Hammett novel, and The
Blue Dahlia (1946) script written by Chandler.
- Tuttle longtime successful studio director,
1920s to 1950s.
- Proves film noir is not just "auteur" cinema.
- Schrader's point on creativity of film noir high
"median level of artistry." Made possible by
noir style/vision.
4(1942) Directed Frank Tuttle
- From Graham Greene novel A Gun for Sale (1936)
- Like Hammett, Greene aspires to be artist draws
from great modernist writers, but is deeply
critical of modern society, much like modernist
poet T. S. Eliot. - Complex, conflicted characters morally
ambiguous, at odds with normal society and
usually doomed.
- Similar to films of French "Poetic Realism."
- Raven as "Angelic killer"--cold-blooded,
"contract" killer, who becomes "agent of social
justice."
- Yet, Raven, with his personal "code," appears
more moral than the big-business, "capitalist"
characters.
5Morality and Moral Ambiguity
- Raven vs. Michael
- What values does each represent?
- Michael Law, Justice, but also Marriage
Family, Middle-class life, conventional moral
values
- Raven Vengeance ("I'm my own police"),
Outsider, Loner, Amoral, antithesis of bourgeois
family life
6Morality and Moral Ambiguity
- At one level, Raven is killed and thus punished
morality triumphs.
- But does it?
- Why does Raven seem more interesting than
Michael?
- So, at another level, film undercuts its explicit
message or theme about morality middle-class
values.
- What is this other level?
7Noir Style and Theme
- Paul Schrader suggests an answer
- Schrader argues that for U.S. critics
audiences, "if a film goes awry it is often
because the theme has been somehow 'violated' by
the style." - But in film noir, "the theme is hidden in the
style, and bogus themes are often flaunted
("middle-class values are best") which contradict
the style." - In This Gun for Hire, the explicit theme or moral
is bogus, contradicts what the film conveys.
- Real theme--film's noir attitudes and view of the
world (represented by Raven)-- lies in its style,
not in its story or "message."
8Style in Noir
- U.S. films ( society?) style secondary to
content or "theme" style is supposed to follow
or "match" theme.
- Schrader "film noir is more interested in style
than in theme."
- Place Peterson "The characteristic film noir
moods of claustrophobia, paranoia, despair, and
nihilism constitute a world view that is not
expressed through the films' terse, elliptical
dialogue, nor through their confusing, often
insoluble plots, but ultimately through their
remarkable style."
9Style Noir
- Schrader Film noir "tried to make America
accept a moral vision of life based on style."
- Noir (like Raven) anti-middle-class values
Sees those values and morality as a deception,
which hides the fact that society ( capitalism?)
is corrupt, brutal, unjust, etc. - This dark vision is not conveyed through story,
dialogue, themes, etc., but through a style that
is dark, unsettling, claustrophobic, etc.
10Noir Stylistic Traits
- Lighting Low-key lighting harsh, hard light
strange lighting angles and patterns opposition
of light dark "lit for night" interiors
"night-for-night" exteriors. - Schrader the "splintering of a scene" by light
makes it "restless and unstable. . . . No
character can speak authoritatively from a space
which is being continually cut into ribbons of
light." - Compositional tension unbalanced/oppressive
composition, claustrophobic framing devices,
off-angle shots (high-angle, low-angle,
oblique/canted framing, etc.) - Place Peterson "create a world that is never
stable or safe"
11Noir Stylistic Traits
- Setting or environment dominates actors
- Schrader "When the environment is given an
equal or greater weight than the actor, it, of
course, creates a fatalistic, hopeless mood.
There is nothing the protagonist can do, the city
will outlast and negate even his best efforts."
12Other Noir Stylistic Traitsmentioned by Schrader
or Place Peterson
- Greater depth of field (relation to low light)
- Unsettling shot distance, "screen size"
juxtaposing CU's to Long Shots
- Lack of camera movement (Note this is a highly
suspect assertion)
- Use of Narration (voiceover)
- Complex chronology and/or confusing plot
- Water wet streets, fog, steam
- Mirrors/mirror shots
13Noir Style
- Place Peterson Film Noir presents "a visually
unstable environment in which no character has a
firm moral base from which he can confidently
operate."
14T-Men
- 1947, dir. Anthony Mann
- Cine. John Alton
- Low-budget, high-style.
- Schrader mentions prominently.
- T-Men Treasury Men